The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) of Nigeria, International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) and NGX Regulation Limited (NGX RegCo) on Monday June 26, launched the first two IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards (IFRS S1 and IFRS S2 Standards).
The launch which held at Nigerian Exchange Group house in
Lagos makes Nigeria the first African country to adopt the standards, just as
they were also launched in six major global financial centers including; New
York, London, Frankfurt, Singapore, Santiago and Montreal.
This is in a bid to empower investors to make better
investment decisions as well as encourage corporates to adopt sustainability at
the core of their financial reporting.
Speaking at the launch, Shuaibu Adamu, Executive Secretary,
FRC noted that it marks a historic milestone for Nigeria and is a testament to
the country’s unwavering commitment to responsible and sustainable business
practices. He also said that as Nigeria adopts the standards, it is setting a
powerful example for other nations and reaffirming its position as one of the
global leaders in sustainability reporting.
“Today, there is a growing global, environmental, social and
governance investor base of over $2 trillion in global institutional investor
funds under management. No country or institution can attract or accept these
private investment capital if you are not seen to be committed to climate and
sustainable development. Nigeria must therefore compete with the rest of the
world for this private capital.
“Obviously, in Nigeria, NGX provides a veritable platform to
attract this capital. Comprehensive, comparable and transparent information
about sustainability and climate related risks and opportunities will play an
essential role in appropriately pricing these risk and opportunities and unlock
the needed private capital flows,” Adamu said.
Also speaking, Tinuade Awe, Chief Executive Officer, NGX
RegCo said that the launch is tremendous for the growth of the capital market
as companies in Nigeria will now have a global baseline that it can use. Awe,
while calling for focus on the forthcoming standards stated, “NGX RegCo remains
committed to promoting a fair, transparent and orderly market that thrives on
full and timely information needed for the protection of investors in the
Nigerian capital market.”
Ndidi Nnoli-Edozien, Board Member, ISSB said that ISSB was
born at COP 26 as a sister entity to the International Accounting Standard
Board (IASB) while noting that its intention to launch the standards was to see
how Nigerian firms process sustainability, climate related risks and
opportunities and embed them in their reporting to help guide capital flows.
“There are close to 300 different standards and what we have done is create a
single global baseline that is interoperable with standards such as GRI and
reduce the cost of reporting burden,” she said.
In a goodwill message, Lamido Yuguda, Director-General,
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) who was represented by Dayo Obisan,
Executive Commissioner, Operations said the launch of the ISSB Standards in
Nigeria signals the country’s readiness to embrace sustainability as a core
value in financial reporting practices. “This sends a strong message to the
global community that Nigeria is committed to transparent and responsible
business practices that prioritize environmental stewardship, social well-being
as well as good governance,” he added.
Commending the NGX RegCo and FRC, Emmanuel Faber, chair,
ISSB said that the lack of comparability and ambiguity about the many available
standards and frameworks have limited the effectiveness of reporting and the
efficiency of capital markets.
Faber further stated that the standards are cost effective
for reporters and useful for investors and added that organizations that use
IFRS 1 and 2 as a tool to communicate to investors will win a financing
competitive advantage.